The road to recovery was
a long one, Grissom told me, with a
lot of wrong turns. He didn't have a map he
could lend me. The most difficult thing
- one of the most difficult things
- was waking to find Mom and Cisco sitting next to my
bed in the
hospital. I remembered the exact same thing
happening when I was
a kid,
after I took a nasty fall during a football game. In my memory they weren't
crying when I opened my
eyes. Mom wasn't clinging to my hand and weeping
like I'd died
and come
back. Maybe I had. I didn't remember, not
then.
Later, I was
glad the tape had gone up in the explosion. No one
knew about it,
I
thought, about my cowardice, about what I was gonna do
just before the
lights
and Warrick yellin' at me. Didn't know about the web
feed for a while. When I
found out, Gil had to stop me from attempting suicide
for a second
time, this
time with a litre of Jack Daniels and a handful of
Tylenol. The second most difficult
thing - if I'm ranking them - was
Warrick. I found out later that he'd been watching
when I shot
out the
light - thought I'd shot myself. Not that time,
Rick. But
he was
edgy when he came to the hospital, and afterwards when
he visited me at
home -
like he was walking on eggshells and any minute he was
gonna put his
foot down
wrongly and break a load of them. We got into a row.
I'd finally sent my parents back to
Having Warrick lay the
guilt/blame trip on me wasn't something
I could cope with then - it's not something I can cope
with now and
this is
after a couple of weeks of serious therapy. He was guilty for not
being the one to go to the trash call,
guilty for not being the one in the box.
He was pissed too, at me
for having been, for making him go
through it all. Like that was my fault.
Course, he wasn't
actually blaming
me, but it sure felt that way and after everything I'd
been through, I
didn't
know what to do with the accusation that somehow I'd
asked for it. So we ended up yellin' at
each other across my
kitchen. And a lot of it was me too, 'cause like I
told him at
the peak
of it - as I'd lain there thinking I was gonna die, I
wished to god I
hadn't
answered the call either. And although I wouldn't
have wished
that on my
worst enemy - except maybe the guy who�d put me inside
that box - there
were
dark moments when I wished I was on the other side of
the investigation. He walked out. I remember having
arguments like that with a girlfriend
years ago. Only this time it was me who ended up
crying on the
kitchen
floor, back against the fridge. He came back, a couple of
hours later, found me standing in
the front yard with a hosepipe watering the parched
lawn. It's
something
you're absolutely not supposed to do in Vegas in the
summer. But
hey -
let them arrest me. We had a couple of beers,
watched a game - couldn't tell you
who won, who was playing or even what sport it
was. Whatever - it
was how
we'd spent countless evenings in the past but that
evening was
uncomfortable. Like he was expecting me to talk
and I knew it and
wasn't
talking. I couldn't. I had no idea what to
say to the guy
who'd
been my best friend for longer than I can remember. He went home and I went
to bed, leaving the window open and
putting my gun under my pillow. I cried myself to
sleep, unable
to stop
the tears from coming. I dreamt I was lying in the
coffin in a
sticky
pool of blood - my blood. I'd shot myself in the head
but I was still
alive,
still trapped with precious little air and ants eating
away at me,
somehow
knowing I'd still be aware when they finished with my
skin and started
in on my
organs. The doorbell woke
me. I lay completely still, heart
beating a heavy, fast rhythm against my ribcage.
Then the
doorbell again
and I grabbed my gun and went to answer it. What
the hell I
looked like -
hair sticking up everywhere, eyes wide and wild, dressed
only in
sleeping
shorts, gun in one hand, door handle in the other - I
had no
idea.
Standing there squinting in the blinding sunlight and
staring at my
boss -
ex-boss - like he was some kinda alien come to visit. And how did the
impeccable Gil Grissom respond to me
standing there looking like a crazy I took a shower and got
dressed, ashamed of the state of the
place although he didn't comment on it. A week out
of the
hospital after
a week in the hospital, I still hadn't gotten around to
putting the
trash out. But by the time I padded
barefoot into the kitchen, he'd
cleaned up the previous night's pizza and beer remains,
but a fresh bag
in the
swing bin, made coffee and warmed the bagels. I felt I should ask why
he was there but I didn't want
to. Truth was, I was glad to see him. He
didn't look
guilty, didn't
talk around the subject. He told me about Kelly
Gordon.
Later,
after I'd visited her in jail, she attacked her cellmate
and was
confined to
solitary. It made the visit worthwhile, as
difficult as it was. He told me about the
ransom. Told me about Ecklie
offering to sell his soul by way of the lab cuts -
something which
would blow
me away when I could think about it. He told me
about Catherine
getting
the million dollars from Sam Braun only for Walter
Gordon to blow
himself to
hell, almost taking the money and Gil with him. I listened like it was a
case with a victim who wasn't
me. I didn't want to be a victim, even though I
sure felt like
one, and
Gil didn't treat me that way Warrick did. He told
me Catherine
wanted to
come round but she was working doubles at the moment,
being one man
down.
He told me I'd been transferred back to the Nightshift
and didn't ask
me if I
was okay with that. I asked about Greg and
Sara - just if they were okay.
He said they wanted to come but they were nervous and I
got that.
Warrick
had been too and I wished he hadn't come. Gil suggested I drop by
the lab one night, when I was ready,
and just say hi. It sounded so normal, so easy,
that I found
myself agreeing
to it. He didn't stay long after
breakfast. He'd come from work
and he needed some sleep. But he asked if he could
come round the
next
morning, same time - cases permitting - and I said,
sure. I told
him it
would be nice. After he left I sat at
the table and cried over the last
bagel. But somehow the sobs didn't hurt as much
and maybe, just
maybe, I
felt better for it. He came round every
morning for a week, bringing breakfast -
bagels, pastries, fruit toast - always something
different. I cleaned the place up a
bit but he didn't comment on that
either. On the Thursday evening I
drove to the lab. It took me
an hour to do a ten-minute journey. The first time I stopped
I pulled into the empty parking lot
of a strip mall and threw up. The last time I'd driven
had been to the fake call that
almost cost me my life. As
far as I
could work out, it had cost me everything but. I sat behind the wheel of
the Tahoe, hands gripping so tight
my arms shook, and I suddenly remembered the contrived
scene like
someone was
playing it back as a movie in my head. Not
me. There's no
way I'd
have chosen to watch it. But I didn't have a
choice. I
pulled over
and was sick next to the dumpsters. I thought about turning
around and going home but I knew
that road and it didn't lead anywhere healthy. So I carried on. A mile from the lab a
familiar Tahoe passed me going in the
opposite direction like a bat out of hell, trying to
keep up with the
cop car
in front of it, lit up like a cheap nightclub. I jerked my 4x4 to the
side of the road and stopped, barely
hearing the honking from the guy behind me. I sat
there, shaking
like a
cactus in an earthquake, fighting the urge to throw up
again. What did me in this
time? The thought of doing my
job. Plain and simple. Something I�d taken
for granted for
so long,
something that a couple of weeks ago was second nature,
like taking a
leak.
I enjoyed it. Now it
carried a kind of
black dread along with the memories of all those times
I'd called 'bad
times' -
Amy Hendler pulling that gun on me, Nigel Crane pushing
me out of a
second
floor window before moving into my attic only to drop
through my
ceiling. Suddenly I couldn't
deal. How the hell was I supposed
to work when I couldn't go ten blocks without being
sick? How
could I
process another crime scene when my hands wouldn't stop
shaking and
this consuming
grief kept on pulling me under? I was so close to turning
right around and going home when I
saw a third black Tahoe in the mirror. It was
going with the flow
of the
traffic, in no hurry to get anywhere. As it passed
I saw
Catherine at the
wheel. At that moment I wanted
nothing more than to hug her and be
hugged. So I turned into the easy-going traffic,
two cars behind
hers,
and pulled into the lab's parking lot a couple of
minutes later. She got out just in front
of me, slamming the door and
opening the back for her kit. "Hey, Cath." For a really horrible
moment I thought she was going to
burst into tears and I knew without a doubt I'd be right
there with her
- what
a great advert we'd make for the But instead she smiled,
grinned, reached for me and hugged
me just like I wanted her to. I hugged her back,
just held her,
because
she was alive and so was I and this was what I'd wanted
� needed -
since my Mom
and Cisco went home. I'd have asked Gil and to be
honest he'd
probably
have obliged. But we'd never have been able to
look one another
in the
eye ever again. We weren�t
ready. "How ya doin', Nicky?" Nicky. Almost undid
me. But I swallowed the lump
and blinked back the tears and took a step back, trying
for a
smile. Gil
had said I was doing okay when it came to smiling - it
was almost
believable,
he'd said. But I couldn't bring
myself to tell her I was fine.
I'm not that good a liar and all she had to do was look
at me.
The bites
were still visible on my hands and face; angry purple
welts like bad
B-movie
make-up. I wasn't sleeping. My eyes were
red-rimmed and as
dark as
the bags under them. She didn't make me
lie. "You stopped in to see us
all?" The cheer in her voice
was slightly forced and I thought how
much of a miracle it would be if I actually got through
this without
dissolving. I knew if I stayed too
long they'd see what Gil had already
seen. I was jumpy.
Claustrophobic
inside, outside... I saw grass and soil and my
treacherous mind showed
me what
was beneath the ground - me in a transparent plastic box
screaming and
clawing
vainly at it in mindless panic. I nodded, not sure of my
voice right then. Catherine grabbed her
kit, locked the Tahoe and led the
way. Into the glass building that housed the crime
lab.
It's a
glass science tank inside a brick skin and the moment I
got inside I
felt like
I'd chewed down some bad calamari. Sweat broke out
all over me,
my
stomach churned in warning and my vision narrowed down
to a sickening
long,
black tunnel at the end of which the brutal strip lights
quickly winked
out. I woke in the break room
and I knew I'd fainted. I
could almost hear Warrick's delighted, dulcet tones -
'Nicky, you
girl!'
But it was wishful thinkin'. Teasing I could have
coped
with. But
Warrick was there, crouched down by the couch I was
lyin' on, his face
a mask
of worry, eyes glassy with that guilt I couldn�t stand
seeing there. "Oh, man." I know
those were the first words
out, I know I wanted to make light of it, get a joke out
of someone -
anyone -
just so I didn't get crushed under the weight of their
collective
concern. Warrick next to me, Cath by the sink. Greg
and Sara standing like Greek statues, her
arms crossed, his hands stuffed deep into his pockets. I couldn't breathe. Then the door opened and
a blissfully irritated voice said,
"We have work to do, people!" I heard the room's
intake of
breath like a tornado being born, heard that same voice
say my name -
surprise
and sympathy - and I thought for one horrible moment he
was gonna leave
me
there with them. But he said in that same
irritated tone, "Give the guy
a break, okay?" God bless Conrad Ecklie. They filed out like
school kids caught smoking, except
Catherine, the Prefect protecting me from the bully. "Thanks for trying," I
told him - hoping he'd know
what I was talking about. He nodded,
self-consciously, like he was ashamed of doing
it. But not of doing it, I
realised; of failing. How bad
had it felt to ask and be turned down? To know the
last
desperate,
ditched attempt had failed and all that was left was...
a
funeral. Not
even that if they couldn't find me. That sick feeling again,
dark memories with sharp teeth
hovering just out of reach, not that I was trying.
I just wanted
to see
Gil, and it made me realise how damn needy I'd
become. Catherine,
Gil...
people who represented safety, normality. In Gil's
case - someone
who'd
seen me low and would eventually see me at my very
worst. Someone
who
knew, without me having to say the things I couldn't
find words for. Occasionally I thought
about putting lyrics to the screaming
in my head. �You�re welcome.
Just� glad you�re all right.�
Ecklie. I was surprised � I�d
never felt further from all right and
I sure as hell didn�t look it. But
I
realised, what else could he say?
�You�re welcome, Nick. Maybe
if
we�d found you sooner you wouldn�t have been forced to
shoot out the
bulb your
colleagues were inadvertently torturing you with. Maybe
you
wouldn�t have let in the ants that filled you so full of
toxins you
were
sick for three days straight � an IV needle in your arm
because not
even water
would stay down.� I felt sick again and
wondered if it would ever feel
right. I looked around, the
glass walls
once again becoming the sides of that coffin, the whole
world pitching
like it
had when that man � Gordon � covered my face with an
ether-soaked cloth
and
held me as everything went red then black. I had no idea where I was
going until I was already half-way
down the blue-hued corridor. I�d
bolted
� leaving Ecklie and Cath startled no doubt but no
choice.
No choice.
I ran. And stopped
outside Gil�s
office, his door open as usual although he wasn�t in
there. I stepped inside, the
office so familiar that a part of my
unhinged brain recognised the safety of it.
Something caught my eye. When
I
think about it, when I let myself, it must have been the
colour green. It�s strange but I
remember it in white and green. The
blinding,
choking light and the eerie glow
of the sticks. It doesn�t
make it any
less real. It�s kinda like
those creepy
fun house places at parks and carnivals.
They�re not real, but the colours are so
extraordinary, and the
sights
and found so unusual, that a kid�s imagination can make
them more real
than the
monotony of meal times or the mind-numbing boredom of
school. And lying there, going
slowly insane in that box, my
imagination was working double, triple shifts.
I dream in green. The photo on Grissom�s
desk was of me. And an ant.
Both of us in that box, only one of us trapped
there. It was lying next to
an open reference book
but right then I wasn�t thinking straight enough to
connect it with my
rescue. Later I would.
Later I�d try to accept that this new horror had
saved my life. It was a slow process, as
I stood and stared at the
upside-down photo � the screen print.
Me. Caught in the
midst of an
agonised fit of thrashing. The
expression
on my face was misery absolute.
But I didn�t need a picture to tell me that.
That it was me was the easy part of the
solution. The Sherlockian
deduction came
a few seconds later � seconds I experienced in slow-mo. Somehow Gil had a
freeze-framed image of me as I lay in that
coffin. Someone had been
watching. Someone had sent
it to him � in exchange for
paying the ransom perhaps. Maybe. It kinda made sense �
Grissom�s a world
famous entomologist. If
someone had done
their homework they�d know what he could do with just a
picture of an
ant. Gil had told me Gordon
had blown himself to hell at the
drop, but maybe he�d emailed this first, hedging his
bets that they
wouldn�t
find the ants and me before my air ran out.
But I like to think I�m a
good CSI � or I was before this
happened. And there was
something wrong
with my theory. A hole Gris
could have
driven
his Tahoe through. The ants
were my
fault. No way Gordon could
have known
they�d be in there with me. I have a trained eye too.
And a trained eye always looks for evidence.
On the desk, caught under the front cover of
the bug encyclopaedia, was a scrap of paper with an IP
address
scribbled in
Sara�s distinctive chicken scratch.
My imagination was still
working that unpaid overtime. Sometimes those things we
imagine are real actually are. I coulda killed someone
on my way home and not have
noticed. I didn�t,
apparently; sheer
luck on the part of the innocent bystander.
Adrenaline-drunk, stressed out and - by the time
I skewed the
Tahoe into
the driveway � sobbing like a broken boiler, I stumbled
into my home. It�s a bit of a blur to
be truthful. I know I tore the holster
getting my gun out, and I know I
stuck the barrel against my chin, pressing it up into
the soft, still
sore skin
behind my jaw. But the
memory of the
last time came flooding back and the grief was
overwhelming. I dropped the weapon and
made a grab for the unopened bottle
of Jack Daniels from the top of the cabinet.
I�d bought it before everything�.
Before I�d been kidnapped and buried alive.
Before my familiar � if not safe � little
world was shattered by a man I hated so much it gave me
purpose. It took me into
the bathroom and opened the
cabinet for me. It took the
pills from
the narrow glass shelf and struggled with the childproof
lid until the
white
tablets leapt and spilled out onto the floor.
Then it leaned down, scooped up a handful and
held them out for
me to
see as time stopped and all I could hear was my heart
beating so fast I
couldn�t keep up. There were other sounds
too.
The deep roar of a straining engine.
The crack of wood giving into anger.
Or terror. A
pounding footfall
across a thin carpet barely disguising hard floorboards.
And a strangled cry, somewhere between a
shout and a scream. The pills leapt again and
skidded across the floor in all
directions. I know I
dropped the bottle
of liquor too because later I could smell it in the
cracks of the
bathroom tiles. But I don�t
remember. All I remember from that
moment to the next is Gil. His
hands.
His voice. Sitting
on the cold
floor next to him, thinking I should be the one who was
crying. He told me everything as
we sat there, both of us too
exhausted, too wrung out to move. He
seemed
barely able to keep it together whereas conversely I
felt better
� like
I�d tried to die and failed. Leaving
me
with only one option. To
live. And that meant
dealing. I still had no idea how.
But the why� he was sitting next to me. The web feed, the light,
the fan, the ants. Those
bugs, the ones I
have a paranoid hatred
for, saved my life. Curiously, once I�d had a
chance to negotiate terms with the
things Gordon had done to me it was the others watching
that was left
to bother
me. With Gil� it kinda felt
okay. He wasn�t watching me
� he was watching over
me. My guardian. My
saviour.
But thoughts like that I knew would lead
somewhere weird,
somewhere I
had no intention of going. So
I let it
go. I had to let it
go. Because I was thinking
along completely different lines. ::breathe:: I went back to work. Gil promised me there was
nothing else, nothing hidden from
me. I had all the
information there was
to be had. I wanted to go
back to work. I wasn�t sleeping.
Not surprisingly. When
I was in
the coffin, just before they found me, I had a� waking
nightmare, a
flash or
something. My own autopsy. Only
it
wasn�t right. Doc Robbins
and David were
laughing. And Cisco was
there. They handed him my
heart. In the dreams I have now,
it ends with Gil kneeling on the
coffin callin' me 'Pancho' and holding out my heart to
me.
Giving it back to me. Those
are the
good dreams. I'd been tellin' him all
this stuff over breakfasts. I
made him
promise he wouldn't make me go see
a shrink until I was ready. He
made me
promise I'd talk to him, wouldn't keep anything about
this from him, no
matter
how bad or weird it got. I
promised. So did he. I figured with the webcam
he'd seen the worst of it
anyway. He'd heard � in a
way - my weak
attempt at a suicide note, heard me apologise for
disappointing him,
letting
him down. He assured me I
never
had. He kept telling me he
was proud of
me. And except for that
night in the
bathroom, he's been my strength when I've honestly
believed I had none. I went back to work. I knew they wouldn't let
me out into the field again for a
while, and honestly the lab itself was the first hurdle
anyway. Too much glass,
people can see everything and
naturally they were looking. I'd come to terms with
Gil watching, in fact I'd used
it. He already knew things
so I didn't
have to tell him - about the light, about the screaming,
about the
mindless acts
of self-inflicted violence. I
was
covered in bruises for days after only they weren�t
visible under the
ant
bites. But Sara, Warrick, Cath,
Greg.... They knew things I
didn't want
them to know. They'd seen
things I didn't
want them to
see. Would I have gone nuts
in there,
would I have dictated that note, would I have... sung
away to myself,
had I
known? I like to think not, I
like to think that I'd have given
them a running commentary - colour of the soil,
wildlife, plant roots,
anything
to help them find me. They
had found
me. Thanks to the webcam
signal. Thanks to the ants. They'd all seen a shrink,
Gil told me, including him. Ecklie
had
made them go. He wanted to
make me go but
Gil had promised
and Ecklie - for whatever reason - wasn't picking fights
with Gil at
the
moment. I went back to work. I processed evidence and
tried to deal with the complex
expressions of a myriad emotions from my colleagues - my
friends. They looked at me
like I was some sorta
miracle, risen from the dead. Guess
they
thought they'd never see me alive again.
They�d see me dead. They
would
have seen that. Because I
knew absolutely
that Gil would never stopped looking for me.
He always says you find new shoots next to grave
sites. He'd have dug to the
root of every new
shoot. He'd have stared at
the ground
each time he was out in the desert or in one of the
parks. He�d have driven
himself insane wondering if I
was under there. I don't think he'd have
survived it and that was one hell of
a humbling thought. The
great Gil
Grissom losing himself. Over
me. Over the past few weeks,
he'd become human to me. All
I'd wanted
since coming to Vegas was to
know him. Seems it took
something like
this for him to want to know me. It
should
have made me angry or upset, but it didn't.
Too angry and upset with a dead man to have those
feelings
towards Gil. Because once
you've sobbed
into someone's
shoulder, once you've drenched them in tears and covered
them in snot -
they
come down off whatever pedestal you've had them on.
Gil had to.
So I could reach him. For a couple of days I
pulled trace from a vic's clothing,
processed a blanket found under a particularly
imaginative murder
weapon, lifted
fingerprints from some bizarre objects after some
lunatic went berserk
in a sex
shop. I fought every urge to
run screaming from the glass
labyrinth, I tried not to think about rats in a maze or
ants in a farm. I formed an
odd friendship with Gil's
tarantula, Tonto, because Gil�s office was the only
place I felt normal
and I'd
retreat there whenever it got too much.
I was doin' okay, taking it a day at a time.
Gettin' there under Gil's extraordinary
patience and my own limited resources. Then Hodges came back in
from a couple of days' break, saw
me, and started mouthing off about being the one to find
the evidence
of
explosives under the prototype coffin.
One of my most vivid
memories of the rescue is of seeing my
friends, my colleagues walk away without letting me out.
I thought I was day-dreaming, another waking
nightmare. Or maybe I was
dead and that
was hell. Gil was the only one to
hold me there for those last agonising
minutes. Without him I'd
have blown
myself and everyone around me straight to hell.
I'd have smashed through the lid, I'd have clawed
my way out and
maybe,
maybe I'd have got a couple of inches to freedom before
being tore to
pieces by
the blast. I hated Hodges for taking
them away from me, as irrational
as it sounded, as crazy as it seemed.
I
loved Gil for staying and hated Hodges for sending them
away. What prototype coffin? It�s tough to put
thoughts and actions back into the order
they happened. They all got
messed up. Hodges told me it was in
the garage. The rumours afterwards
went something along the lines of Grissom
finding Hodges and having to be prevented, by Brass,
from putting the
lab rat�s
head in the centrifuge. No
one believes
it, but everyone was talking about it for weeks. Hodges told me it was in
the garage. When I saw it
on the workbench
my first
thought was that Gil had lied to me.
But
it was displaced by so many other thoughts and they had
great big teeth
that
shredded what little control I�d managed to claw back. My vision tunnelled until
all I could see was that brutal,
hideous device at the end of it where the light should
have been. And then there was a
light.
Harsh, hard, cuttingly bright, and it ripped the
air from my
lungs until
I couldn�t breathe. The fire axe was always
present � and someone must have been
experimenting �cause it was leaning against the far wall
of the garage. Somewhere it
shouldn�t be.
I don�t remember picking it up.
But
I lay into that box like destroying it
would stop the nightmares and the panic attacks, would
heal the
pockmarks left
all over me, would take away the fucking awful memories,
memories I
didn�t
want, memories I wish I could tear out of my head. I revelled in the
tortured surrender of the plexi-glass,
sought my own healing in the demolition of the only
thing left for me
to exact
my revenge from. The sharp cracks as the
structure succumbed to the heavy
blade, the parting of shards as the hard material
relented in the path
of the
axe. Those cathartic sounds
were all I
could hear. Tiny flecks of
plexi-glass dug into my unprotected hands,
arms and face, but I didn�t feel them.
They left little red rivulets of blood but I
ignored them. I wanted to
ruin the box the same way it had
ruined me. Completely.
Utterly.
With devastating impact. Me. It. Just the two of us, locked
together. Then a word, a name.
And I was back, lying in the coffin surrounded by
earth, banging
uselessly, weakly on the lid, begging them to let me
out.
Please.
Let me out. Please.
The ants crawlin� all over me, sinking into
me. Please� let me out. �Pancho!� I swung round, axe raised.
And god knows what I looked like but Gil didn�t
flinch, didn�t
back
away. He stood there, hand
up, palm out,
fingers slightly apart. �Put your hand on mine.� I couldn�t have disobeyed
even if I�d wanted to. I
wasn�t really
there � I was back, way back,
struggling to breathe, sobbing so hard my whole body was
shaking. There was glass
against my sweating palm as I
met his hand. I heard the
axe crash to
the floor but it was far away, half-imagined, like the
rough feel of
his skin. The scratching of the
soil and ants crushed beneath me
became solid, brick wall. The
cold,
inhuman embrace of the coffin became a warm, real cradle
of arms as I
slid to
the floor. Tears blended with blood
and flecks of plastic, the mix
soaking Gil�s shirt as I clung to him, bawling � a wild,
desperate
eruption. When I came back to
myself I was sitting curled into him,
his arms around me, his face on my head, his shirt
almost torn by my
clawed
hands. All I could hear was
the rumble
of his voice telling me he�d got me, telling me I was
safe. That same voice I
remember from that night,
feeling that same relief � that overwhelming relief. Never saying it was okay
because it wasn�t. And we
both knew it. I calmed down, very
slowly.
I had to force myself to let go of his shirt.
Still he held me. And finally I lifted my
head and saw the state of the
garage. The shattered
plexi-glass
box. The wrecked workbench
underneath
the remains. I tried to run
and Gil
stopped me. I heard a sound
like a
wounded animal and realised it was me. �Nicky.� Not Pancho. �Sorry.� �Why?� The mess.
The
destruction. The fact I�d
just gone
loopy in the lab garage with an axe.
How
about sitting in my boss� arms on said garage floor
looking like one of
the
vics Robbins examines�? Bad move. At least I managed to
twist away from Gil before I threw
up. It wasn�t one thing �
one memory,
one image, one thought. It
was
everything. Ether,
adrenaline, terror,
panic, green, earth, burial, shock, light, suffocation,
pain, horror,
poison,
panic, desperation, suicide� a relief so incredible, so
miraculous�. Yet even that
was laced with dread. I reached out blindly and
again Gil was there, his hands
soothing as I dug my nails into his arm. I was such a fucking mess.
Blood from the tiny cuts, eyes swollen from
crying, snot running
from my
nose, puke around my mouth. When I turned back,
wiping my mouth with my hand, Gil was
looking at me so intensely� like I was the only thing in
the world. Like I was
incredibly precious to him. I think I said I needed
to clean up. He told me to
wait. I didn�t understand
until I looked up towards
the window that made up most of the opposite wall.
They were fucking watching!
Again! After that, I don�t
remember anything for a while. ::breathe:: Everything was cool.
The white sheets, the fresh breeze that was air
conditioning. Even the hand
holding mine. Gil was sitting close to
the bed. When I opened my
eyes, he leaned
forward. I knew where I was
by the look on
his face. Back in the hospital. Nothing really hurt so I
guessed I hadn�t damaged anything
too vital too badly. I just
hoped I hadn�t
tried to take anyone down with me on my way to hell.
All I could actually remember was seeing that
damn box right where fucking Hodges said it would be. The first words out of my
mouth were along the lines of �You
said there was nothing else.� Accusation. Didn�t remember how much
destruction I�d
wrought
yet. There was no hint of
it in Gil�s
face. He just promised me
he hadn�t
deliberately
not told me about the prototype. With
everything
else that had been going on, he�d forgotten about it. I felt like an asshole. Everything
Gil had done for me and I was
still taking from him. No
giving from
me. Sorry didn�t seem
adequate, and from him it was redundant. But I still had no idea
how much I had to apologise for. Waking brought with it
awareness. My right
shoulder was throbbing. Wrists
and ankles stinging.
It took a moment to process, but I knew what
it meant and lifting the hand that wasn�t tucked under
Gil�s, I
confirmed what
I knew. A ring of red skin
just below my
hand, wrist rubbed raw. I�d
been
restrained. I felt sick again � dread
sitting in my stomach like a bad
burrito. Gil must have seen
it because
he squeezed my hand and told me straight what had
happened. He kindly
described it as a �panic attack�,
bet everyone else was describing it as a �psychotic
episode�. I�d gone for the window
where my colleagues � friends, I
kept reminding myself � were standing.
First with my body and when that hadn�t worked,
I�d grabbed up
the fire
axe from where I�d dropped it. I
was
lucky. Everyone was lucky.
After the explosion the previous year they�d
installed safety glass in all the windows in the
facility.
When the blade hit, it didn�t shatter into
shards,
it cracked, it webbed. I didn�t hurt anyone,
thank god. Except Gil.
He�d tried to make a grab for me and I�d turned
and punched him,
hard by
the look of the bruise coming out on his jaw. I lay there and cried as
he told me I�d been restrained by a
couple of cops, under Jim�s close and sympathetic
supervision. Someone had
called an ambulance but I wasn�t
about to go quietly. Thus
the cuffs. I had Gil to thank for
the fact I hadn�t come round still fastened
to the bed. Had him to
thank too that I
could think straight. He�d
gone with me
in the ambulance, he�d stayed with me, stopped them from
drugging me
passed
that first shot. �You scared Greg,� he
told me. I didn�t believe
him. But I�d scared them
all a little bit. Except
Catherine, who came to visit me at
home later, hugged me and still looked at me with
nothing but love and
this
intense gratefulness. And Gil, of course.
He promised to take me home as soon as the
doctors cleared me. Without
Gil I might have been put on suicide
watch. Without Gil I might
have been
sectioned. Without him I
might have gone
home and made another grab for the JD bottle. But he was there.
Sitting next to me up front in the Tahoe, driving
me away from
the
hospital, not in the least bit changed towards me.
In his shoes, I might have been a little wary
of an axe-wielding lunatic. I sat back and looked out
of the window, watched Vegas pass
by, the neon lights against the velvet darkness, with
its twinkling
sequins,
that seemed to embrace us. �Can we go outta town?� I don�t know where it
came from. Suddenly I just
wanted to be
somewhere else,
and the desert lets you believe you�re anywhere. It�s
the only forgiveness it offers. I looked round at him
when I asked and I saw a flit of
uncertainty across his face but he didn�t deny me.
I didn�t know if there was anything he would
have denied me except an end to it.
He
nodded, and as we headed out of the city I started � for
once in weeks
� to
think about someone else. To
think about
him. I love the desert at
night.
Out here the old Vegas dealt out its justice.
There are so many bodies buried out there, so
many ghosts. Could have
been me. �Where was I� buried?� Direct thought-to-mouth
connection, no need for me to step
in. �A nursery east of Vegas.� �I�d like to go there.� Gil pulled over to the
side of the road and I thought about
gagging myself. I had no
idea what stupid
suggestion was comin� next. Getting
outta
the Tahoe I went around to the front and leaned against
the
grille. Looking up I could
see every star,
every
constellation in perfect detail. Gil�s
heat
arrived next to me. I�ll never forget the
gist of what he said. It
went something a
lot like � �That night
was the worst night of my life.
Attending Gordon�s contrived crime scene,
collecting evidence
that I
thought was going to convict your killer�.
And then seeing you on that camera, knowing what
you�d be going
through,
knowing and not being able to do a thing about it.
Catherine accused me of not doing anything
and she was right. I
couldn�t think
straight. Then she handed
me the money
from Braun, and as mad as I was I was desperate. I
wanted to cry. It
galvanised me. Finally
there was something solid, a ransom
drop-off. Something real I
could do to
get you back. Gordon asked
me if you
were my guy, if we were close. If
the
money was rigged or fake. I
just wanted
you back � just wanted to rip into him to get him to
tell me where you
were so
I could get you out of that hell. It
was
such a long night for us but all I could think was how
long it must be
feeling
to you. And when he blew
himself up �
when I saw the explosives � I felt more helpless than
I�ve ever felt.� I might have got some of
the words wrong, but that was the
gist of it. He was losing it like he
had done in my bathroom after he�d
stopped me from chasing down pills with Jack Daniels.
I could see the tension in his body, his
fists balled like he wanted to strike someone. I don�t know what made me
reach out, made me wrap my palm around
his white-knuckled fingers. �Believe me, Nick, I
wanted to open the lid of that damned
box and just pull you out. Every
second
we had to leave you in there I was dying inside. And
I know � I know � that�s nothing compared
to how you felt.� I was the one that turned.
I pulled him into the embrace.
So
much between us right then. I
needed to
hold him as much as I thought he needed to feel me alive
against him. There was
nothing more than that, nothing
romantic, nothing sexual. So I don�t know why I
kissed him. And I don�t
know why he kissed
me back. His mouth moved
restlessly, exquisitely over mine, his tongue
hesitantly stretching to taste me. Nothing melted into
everything. Suddenly he was
the only thing
that existed
for me. When he pulled back
I refused to
let him go. �This isn�t what you need
right now, Nick.� �It�s exactly what I
need, Gil. So what about
you?� He hesitated but
admitted, �I need you.� Those
words, so
simple, took away the
neediness and the pathetic feeling of cowardice. I
could be there for him � just for that night
� rather than him being there for me. He stood, his hands
awkward on my waist, and I thought he
was going to fly apart in front of me. �When you reached out of
the box and grabbed my arm� I
didn�t know how I�d ever be able to let go.� Stunned, I tried to
reassure him, and the words, �You don�t
have to,� slipped out of their own accord. �Nick� I don�t mean to
lay all this on you. You�ve
enough to deal
with�.� �Don�t do this.
Don�t
treat me with pity like the others are doing, I can�t
deal, Gil, not
you. Please.� The relief when he
tightened his arms and gathered me
against him was overwhelming. He
held
me, then I lifted my head and he kissed me. The journey to his place
was strange. A tension I�d
hoped for
between us strangely
since the incident on my bathroom floor.
We were both worried. We
were
both walking a fine line between emotional and insane.
Therapy was probably what I needed most right
then and we both knew the therapy we had in mind wasn�t
departmentally
approved. But once he closed the
door to his townhouse behind us, once
his hands were on me, his mouth finding mine, everything
else became
nothing
and for a time there was just he and I.
I never thought I�d be
letting any barriers down in front of
Gil Grissom. Up until then
the one who
knew me best was Catherine. She
was the
one I�d �fessed up to about the babysitter � that woman
was a long time
ago but
it still hurt. Never
thought I�d break
down in front of Gris. Never
thought
he�d break down in front of me. Never thought I�d wake
with my head against his shoulder,
one bare leg hooked possessively over his.
Never thought I�d know the sound of his voice
raised in his
reach for
climax or the heat of his mouth on my cock.
Jeez� he�d wiped me out before but after I woke
to find him
watching me,
he wrapped his hand lazily around me and spent an hour
drawing out the
most
incredible orgasm I�ve ever experienced. I slept again.
And
this time I dreamt. I
dreamt of green
ants eating me alive and when they crawled into my mouth
I choked out a
scream,
opening my eyes to stare straight into his.
I was lying on my side and he was facing me, his
hand stroking
my hair,
his thumb brushing the shell of my ear. He asked me if I had a
lot of nightmares, I didn�t bother
answering, just asked him right back.
Every night, he said. He
didn�t
sleep much any more. So I
crawled over
him, wrapped myself around him, and we both finally
settled. It was a long time
before we dropped off to
sleep, just as the neighbourhood was waking, but by the
time we woke it
was
gone ::breathe:: He cut the Tahoe's engine and we sat in silence, in the dark. I tried to imagine it - a convoy of SUVs and police cars speeding along the lonely road we'd just driven, my friends and colleagues racing time and the odds to find me. I started to understand what they were going through. Started to see passed my own pain enough to understand that they were hurting too. Gil didn't ask me if I was sure I wanted to do it. He got out, opened up the back and took two powerful torches, switching them on and handing one to me. "I'm here," is all he said. Then he led the way forward along a wide, winding path, deep into the nursery. It was a couple of minutes before we came out into a clearing. I knew they'd have come running into the clearing that night - someone spotting a clue, a piece of evidence. Maybe the transmitter for the web cam. Shouting, digging, first with bare hands then with shovels. Only when I was back there did I start to appreciate the enormity of what they'd done and the true horror of what had been done to me. So remote, so hidden. It could have been anywhere and still they�d found me, still they rescued me before my air ran out or I blasted my brains all over the box and it really did become my coffin. But not my grave. It was never meant to be my grave. Not unmarked, Gil had promised me a couple of nights before, as we lay together in the dark, touching, talking. He'd vowed to find me, however long it took, whatever the cost. He told me how little a million dollars meant when it was compared to the worth of my life. I would never go un-remarked. I would never be forgotten. And now, I would never be unloved. It was an incredibly powerful feeling - one that even now is keeping me afloat. Gil pointed out the site, but I already knew. I knelt by the filled-in hole, the dirt still loose, and pressed my hand flat to the ground. My tears fell to the soil. He stayed with me, ever
present, waiting, watching. Or
maybe not.
Maybe he was lost in his own memories of the
place � memories
more
shocking in their intensity than mine.
Because for me it was my imagination linking me
to the freshly
dug
earth. It was my conscious
mind burying
the box there, with me trapped inside.
I
wouldn�t have recognised the place if Gil hadn�t taken
me there. But he knew it � for him
it was etched like a dark landscape
into his mind, the backdrop for his thoughts, the
setting for his
nightmares. It was a place
of too many
horrors. In the end, it was
just
soil. Soil loaded with ants. I stared as the one then
another then another marched across
my fingers like the scouting party of a military force. I stared.
At that
moment I couldn�t move or scream or breathe. But as the first fire ant
inflicted its fiery sting I found
I could do all three. Even I was impressed.
From a suitably safe and detached distance, I
kinda watched
myself drop
back on my ass, brandishing my hand like a dangerous
weapon, shaking it
like I
was tryin� to shake it right off. If
Gil
had offered me a sharp enough blade I�d have probably
hacked my hand
off at the
wrist. A tiny part of my
mind logged
that idea as a potential best-selling plot for a real
audience-pleaser
of a
nightmare. I hate my
subconscious. I couldn�t help but
wander if Gil would get tired of saving
my skin. He took my forearm
and held it
firm and steady. He brushed
the one
remaining ant from my skin, inspecting the fresh bite
under the strong
beam of
the torch. �You�ll be okay,
grasshopper,� he assured me, the one and
only time he�d told me that since I was taken.
And there was something in the way he said it �
an easy tone
like he�d
used in the past. It
reminded me of when
Greg found radioactive paint on the gnome that had been
used to bash a
guy�s
head in. No fuss, no
unnecessary
comforting. A bit of
unnecessary
hand-holding
perhaps, but I wasn�t complaining.
Nobody�s perfect, right? He drove us outta there.
�Nothing to see here.� There
wasn�t. Just a ton of
disturbed earth
and one very disturbed guy. I
didn�t
know if I�d ever get over it, if I�d ever be able to
commit it to the
past. It�s possible, I
guess.
Anything�s possible. I looked over at Gil.
And I knew he was thinking the exact same thing. ::breathe:: When I stepped out of the
cool darkness of the prison and
into the brilliant sunshine, I slipped my shades on and
looked over to
the
black Tahoe in the heat haze of the parking lot. Despite
my tears, I smiled. Gil was
leaning back
against the hot SUV,
ankles and arms crossed, expression clear despite the
sunglasses
obscuring his
eyes. He was pissed.
But
all the same he�d had someone drive him out here. Whoever
he�d talked into it was long gone. �Thought you weren�t
going to do this alone?� he called out
as soon as he knew I�d hear. I waited till I was a few
feet away. �I had to, man.
I�m sorry.�
But whatever bravado was in the words, me
sniffing a moment
later wiped
it clean away. �Still want to do it
alone?� Pathetically I shook my
head, but there was nothing
demeaning in the way he reached for me. �Nothin� I said is gonna
make the slightest difference,� I muttered
into his shoulder. �It is, Nick.
Just
let her think on it for a while.� I
stepped back and he let me. �What
about
you?� I didn�t know.
I
didn�t even know really why I�d needed to go, to see
her.
A link, I suppose, the only link to the man
who�d taken me, terrorised me. Almost
killed
me. For his daughter.
I needed to see her, to
make it real. He was too
powerful as a
thought, as a
shadowy memory. I needed
him to be human
because humans were fallible. Humans
could
be defeated. Gil inclined his head,
smiling that odd smile of his. �Home?� �Yeah.�
Home. With Gil.
No one�s saying something good came out of this.
No one�s that crazy, except perhaps me. But
it�s something. |